@cubesnyc structs are "value types", classes are "reference types", that ValueType you mentioned are either of the two. It's just a class named after a concept.
> Although ValueType is the implicit base class for value types, you cannot create a class that inherits from ValueType directly. Instead, individual compilers provide a language keyword or construct (such as struct in C# and Structure…End Structure in Visual Basic) to support the creation of value types.
Excuse my ignorance. There's an implicit inheritance from ValueType for every value types assigned by compiler.
We want to write an application for Android, but I am totally new in Android. So It worth starting our project with Xamarin or Flutter? Base on the fact that I am C# developer.
Hi from Malaysia Android Studio is still must have even you starts at Xamarin. Take note that Xamarin.Forms and Xamarin.Android are completely different thing.
Go with Xamarin. Either Xamarin.Android if you want to use a platform which is essentially just the standard android development but with C# instead of Java, or Xamarin.Forms if you want something a little more like other .net frameworks, with the option for also developing for other platforms too
Also soming from a Xamarin dev with about 3 years background
@ChristophBühler You can't just give your opinion without saying "Hi from <country>" in a seperate message first
My C# App receives messages in JSON format eg. { "type": "LOGIN", "user": "xx", "pw": "xx" } How can I convert these messages to Classes (eg. LoginMessage)?
I'd like to be able to do sth like: messages.on<LoginMessage>( (msg) => print(msg.user) );
tldr 0 cannot be represented properly as a floating point number
Most implementations when rendering the value out as a string round it to 0
But it's not zero. Just really really really really really close to zero
Floats are great because you can have a truly gigantic range of values compared to other types with a specified amount of memory/bytes. However, they're terrible because no matter how big you make the range of values, the amount of values you can have remains the same.
Unless you have some bizarre dire need to conserve resources to the point where decimal vs floats actually matters, just use decimal instead of floats
Somehoe I have a feeling the value range isn't that bad, unless you need values bigger than 79,228,162,514,264,337,593,543,950,335, in which case maybe a double is good. Doubles put you up to roughly 1.8E+308
Definitely don't use floats becuase they're only accurate to ~7 digits. doubles are accurate to ~16 digits, and decimals are accurate to ~29 digits
So you could easily get their bank account information and are now so rich you don't know whether to charter SpaceX to fly to space or just build your own rocket?
And my notes are hard to read when put into a typed form anyway
Like I had a meeting the other day, and made some notes before hand, which somebody else typed up for the others (correctly) but I couldn't get my head around it
But all of my handwritten notes have either been taken on that or my older Surface Pro 3 or my older older Surface RT back when I was in college
lol wat
Actually, not entirely true. The brief period when I had a Galaxy Note 8 (terrible phone) I used onenote on that. The note pen wasn't actually that bad, just the rest of the phone was
Only had it about 2 months before getting rid of it
By default all projects are in the same folder if you use solution folders
You need to set them during project creation for them to match on the file system
As for advantage, if you're trying to monkey around with namespaces it will come to bite you or you'll just end up using FQN because of how broken it got.
@cubesnyc some says folders better from performance wise, I didn't see measures, but it's interesting question actually, I worked on a Xamarin project that is devided into modules (assemblies), it was slow at build, and I think that number of assemblies per sollution affect the build time.